wallacepolsom
i don't do bad sauce passes
Peter Solarz
Mike Driver

Kaledo Art

pixel skylines

titsay
dirt enthusiast
$LAYYYTER
RMH
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
🪼

izzy's playlists!
occasionally subtle

Kiana Khansmith
Show & Tell
Jules of Nature
trying on a metaphor

roma★
Stranger Things

seen from Malaysia
seen from Türkiye

seen from Italy

seen from United States

seen from Türkiye

seen from United States

seen from Saudi Arabia
seen from Belgium
seen from Finland

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from China

seen from United States
seen from Malaysia

seen from Italy
seen from Greece

seen from Germany

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Colombia

seen from India
@horusthecelestineking
Legend of Zelda Samurai
It’s dangerous to go alone. Take them.
Abhishek Singh
Abhishek Singh
Arya with her BFF.
みなみうみ
Ladies of Avatar in rainbow requested by anonymous
So… i built a mini-tardis!! It took me a couple of weeks but i’m very proud of myself!
(by taeco*****)
“With Fantastic Mr. Fox, Wes Anderson accomplished two personal firsts: He adapted someone else’s work—in this case, Roald Dahl’s children’s novel, enhanced with details from Dahl’s Danny The Champion Of The World and the author’s life—and he tried his hand at stop-motion animation. Giving himself over to Dahl and a team of puppeteers and animators might seem like a departure for Anderson—a necessary one, according to the detractors who harp on his insularity—but Fantastic Mr. Fox is as much “A Wes Anderson Film” as anything else he’s done to date. Part of that is owed to the extraordinary control Anderson exerts over all his productions, an auteur stamp so distinctive that it can be recognized from the first frame. But the film also doubles as a Wes Anderson origin story: Dahl’s influence on the director is so immense that the deeper he gets into Dahl’s world, the deeper viewers get into the roots of his sensibility.”
The new Criterion release of West Anderson’s Fantastic Mr. Fox is, well, fantastic. Read the full review.